Dave Chappelle — "I don’t trust white people’s love of me. Because I know if I say the wrong thing…"
I don’t trust white people’s love of me. Because I know if I say the wrong thing, they’ll take it all away.
I don’t trust white people’s love of me. Because I know if I say the wrong thing, they’ll take it all away.
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"The only thing a black man can do today is be a comedian. You can't be a president, you can't be a CEO, you can't be a astronaut. You gotta be a comedian."
"I'm not here to be liked. I'm here to be heard."
"I don’t want people to think I’m crazy, but I think the moon might be a spaceship."
"All white people talk about when they get high is other times that they got high."
"“I'm not saying all #MeToo allegations are fake, but some of them are pretty convenient.”"
American comedian whose Chappelle's Show (2003-2006) reshaped 21st-century comedy and whose 2010s-2020s Netflix specials triggered debates over comedy and offense. Closely associated with Richard Pryor (predecessor in race-and-language American stand-up) and Eddie Murphy (1980s SNL trailblazer). For an intellectual contrast, see Hannah Gadsby, Australian comedian and Nanette creator — Nanette (2018) explicitly attacks the stand-up tradition Chappelle works within and treats traditional punchline comedy as a structure of power. Nanette and Chappelle's Sticks & Stones are the two most-discussed comedy specials of the late-2010s, taking opposite positions on whether stand-up structurally enables or excuses harm.
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